{"id":45053,"date":"2023-03-17T08:07:15","date_gmt":"2023-03-17T09:07:15","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/peymantaeidi.net\/stem-cell\/?p=45053"},"modified":"2023-03-17T09:37:18","modified_gmt":"2023-03-17T09:37:18","slug":"josh-kline-is-an-artist-for-the-end-of-the-world","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/peymantaeidi.net\/stem-cell\/2023\/03\/17\/josh-kline-is-an-artist-for-the-end-of-the-world\/","title":{"rendered":"Josh Kline Is an Artist for the End of the World"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"css-s99gbd StoryBodyCompanionColumn\">\n<div class=\"css-53u6y8\">\n<p class=\"css-at9mc1 evys1bk0\">WHEN \u201cSURROUND AUDIENCE,\u201d the New Museum\u2019s <a class=\"css-yywogo\" href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2015\/02\/27\/arts\/design\/review-new-museum-triennial-casts-a-wary-eye-on-the-future.html\" title=\"\">third triennial<\/a> of contemporary art, opened in downtown New York in 2015, one piece quickly emerged as the standout. The mixed-media artist Josh Kline had created a full-room installation that deftly captured the daily indignities and collective angst of life in a sputtering democracy. The piece\u2019s actual title is \u201cFreedom,\u201d but most viewers referred to it by another name: the Teletubbies.<\/p>\n<p class=\"css-at9mc1 evys1bk0\">For those unfamiliar with the British children\u2019s television show from the late 1990s (and those fortunate enough to have forgotten it), the Teletubbies were plush, crayon-colored creatures who babbled in baby talk while watching videos of human children on screens embedded in their stomachs. For \u201cFreedom,\u201d Kline drew on his experiences as a protester during the Occupy Wall Street demonstrations of 2011 to reimagine them as adult-size paramilitary storm troopers whose bellies played videos of real police officers impassively reading social media posts on police violence, privacy and torture. Using primitive facial-mapping software, Kline grafted the faces of the activists who\u2019d written the posts onto those of the officers reading them, as though the resistance had been digested by the very systems it had hoped to topple. An allegory of state surveillance, the piece was dark \u2026 but also tragicomic, and Kline, then 35, went from being a presence on the nascent Manhattan Chinatown gallery scene to booking solo museum shows. Since then, he has delivered similarly mordant visions of corporate piracy, class inequality and civil war. In April, his midcareer survey, \u201c<a class=\"css-yywogo\" href=\"https:\/\/whitney.org\/exhibitions\/josh-kline\" title=\"\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\">Project for a New American Century<\/a>,\u201d will open at New York\u2019s Whitney Museum of American Art. \u201cI feel like you can\u2019t just give people gloom,\u201d he said this past fall, sitting in the sunny Chinatown office where he works with a small team of collaborators. \u201cThe viewer needs a little relief.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div class=\"css-79elbk\" data-testid=\"photoviewer-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"css-z3e15g\" data-testid=\"photoviewer-wrapper-hidden\"><\/div>\n<div data-testid=\"photoviewer-children\" class=\"css-1a48zt4 e11si9ry5\">\n<figure class=\"img-sz-large css-qg3dyg e1g7ppur0\" aria-label=\"media\" role=\"group\">\n<div class=\"css-1xdhyk6 erfvjey0\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" alt=\"\u201cRespect,\u201d from Kline\u2019s 2015 installation, \u201cFreedom,\u201d which debuted at the New Museum in New York.\" class=\"css-r3fift\" src=\"https:\/\/peymantaeidi.net\/stem-cell\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/17tmag-joshkline-slide-I5N9-articleLarge.jpg\" width=\"600\" height=\"852\" \/><\/div><figcaption class=\"css-vwjwk3 ewdxa0s0\"><span aria-hidden=\"true\" class=\"css-1p4ky1 e13ogyst0\">\u201cRespect,\u201d from Kline\u2019s 2015 installation, \u201cFreedom,\u201d which debuted at the New Museum in New York.<\/span><span class=\"css-f4bmw8 e1z0qqy90\"><span><span aria-hidden=\"false\">Photo by Joerg Lohse. Courtesy of the artist and 47 Canal, New York<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"css-s99gbd StoryBodyCompanionColumn\">\n<div class=\"css-53u6y8\">\n<p class=\"css-at9mc1 evys1bk0\">Kline, now 43, belongs to a broad, multigenerational group of artists addressing the transformative effects of technology on human society. What they create doesn\u2019t fit neatly under a single label: None of the provisional terms, like \u201cpost-internet art,\u201d have found widespread acceptance. Some work in digital media, some shoot videos, some make sculptures, some do all of these and more. Their subjects are equally eclectic, ranging from the mutability of online selves to the dissolution of authorship in the digital age. Kline is simultaneously more earnest and more playful than many of his peers. Much like the art-fashion collective <a class=\"css-yywogo\" href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2012\/11\/18\/fashion\/at-dis-magazine-not-the-usual-rules.html\" title=\"\">DIS<\/a> (who often include Kline in their curatorial projects, and whom he includes in his), he hijacks the aesthetics of retail displays, logos, ads and corporate branding in his work. But unlike DIS \u2014 who do so without discernible politics and tend to glamorize a sense of existential resignation \u2014 Kline is stridently and sincerely polemical. His closest peers might be <a class=\"css-yywogo\" href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2013\/04\/12\/arts\/design\/jon-kessler-the-web.html\" title=\"\">Jon Kessler<\/a>, <a class=\"css-yywogo\" href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2017\/08\/29\/t-magazine\/art\/trevor-paglen.html\" title=\"\">Trevor Paglen<\/a> and <a class=\"css-yywogo\" href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2017\/12\/15\/arts\/design\/hito-steyerl.html\" title=\"\">Hito Steyerl<\/a>, artists who have delivered similarly pointed critiques of the military-industrial complex, surveillance and state secrecy, but Kline\u2019s sense of humor sets him apart, as does his focus on labor and class.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<div class=\"css-s99gbd StoryBodyCompanionColumn\">\n<div class=\"css-53u6y8\">\n<p class=\"css-at9mc1 evys1bk0\">HE OWES HIS populist worldview partly to his upbringing. Kline\u2019s father, a biochemist at Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, was laid off around the age of 50, when Kline, an only child, was in high school. His mother, who died when he was in college, was from the Philippines and originally a pharmaceutical chemist. After Kline was born, she catered Filipino food, sold insurance and processed tax returns to support the family. His work, he said, has a lot to do with \u201cseeing their American dreams fizzle out.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"css-at9mc1 evys1bk0\">After an early interest in physics and nanotechnology that ended when he flunked calculus, Kline earned a film degree from Philadelphia\u2019s Temple University, where he began making video art as well as installations and staging public interventions, though he didn\u2019t call them that. His interest in rampant commercialism found early expression in a series of photocopied posters of manicured hands holding PalmPilots that Kline pasted up around the city. On another occasion, he \u201cforaged,\u201d as he put it, a herd of shopping carts, spray-painted them gold and filled them with ads for fake products and papier-m\u00e2ch\u00e9 pills.<\/p>\n<p class=\"css-at9mc1 evys1bk0\">In 2002, three months after he graduated, he moved into the rent-controlled apartment in Brooklyn\u2019s Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood that he still calls home. After scraping by with freelance web design jobs, he eventually landed a curatorial position at Electronic Arts Intermix, a nonprofit archive of video and media art. There, Kline worked directly with the materials of artists he admired, including <a class=\"css-yywogo\" href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2011\/08\/12\/arts\/design\/dara-birnbaum-arabesque.html\" title=\"\">Dara Birnbaum<\/a>, <a class=\"css-yywogo\" href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2008\/05\/13\/arts\/design\/13ica.html\" title=\"\">Mike Smith<\/a> and <a class=\"css-yywogo\" href=\"https:\/\/www.eai.org\/artists\/bruce-and-norman-yonemoto\/biography\" title=\"\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\">Bruce and Norman Yonemoto<\/a> \u2014 pioneers who skewered clich\u00e9s of movies, soap operas and other mainstream entertainment. (Birnbaum, for instance, is best known for <a class=\"css-yywogo\" href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=wJhEgbz9piI\" title=\"\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\">deconstructing female archetypes<\/a> in shows like \u201cWonder Woman.\u201d)<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div class=\"css-79elbk\" data-testid=\"photoviewer-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"css-z3e15g\" data-testid=\"photoviewer-wrapper-hidden\"><\/div>\n<div data-testid=\"photoviewer-children\" class=\"css-1a48zt4 e11si9ry5\">\n<figure class=\"img-sz-large css-hxpw2c e1g7ppur0\" aria-label=\"media\" role=\"group\">\n<div class=\"css-1xdhyk6 erfvjey0\">\n<div class=\"css-nwd8t8\" data-testid=\"lazy-image\">\n<div data-testid=\"lazyimage-container\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"css-vwjwk3 ewdxa0s0\"><span aria-hidden=\"true\" class=\"css-1p4ky1 e13ogyst0\">A still from Kline\u2019s film \u201cAdaptation\u201d (2019-22), which depicts a dystopian vision of a future Manhattan.<\/span><span class=\"css-f4bmw8 e1z0qqy90\"><span><span aria-hidden=\"false\">Courtesy of the artist and 47 Canal, New York<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"css-s99gbd StoryBodyCompanionColumn\">\n<div class=\"css-53u6y8\">\n<p class=\"css-at9mc1 evys1bk0\">Kline and his circle \u2014 a group of artists working across various media that includes <a class=\"css-yywogo\" href=\"https:\/\/archive.nytimes.com\/tmagazine.blogs.nytimes.com\/2013\/08\/20\/art-market-margaret-lees-one-woman-show\/\" title=\"\">Margaret Lee<\/a>, Jon Santos and <a class=\"css-yywogo\" href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2017\/02\/14\/t-magazine\/art\/anicka-yi.html\" title=\"\">Anicka Yi<\/a> \u2014 struggled to find art world traction. While artist-run galleries had once commanded the respect of the establishment, the few alternative spaces that existed in the early 2000s were widely ignored by industry gatekeepers. But the subprime mortgage crisis that began in 2007 briefly changed that, allowing scruffier experimental ventures to gain a foothold. In 2009, Lee secured a lease on a defunct jewelry showroom in Chinatown that became the exhibition space 179 Canal.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<div class=\"css-s99gbd StoryBodyCompanionColumn\">\n<div class=\"css-53u6y8\">\n<p class=\"css-at9mc1 evys1bk0\">Around this time, Kline began making work in which bodies, brands and products blur together. For \u201c<a class=\"css-yywogo\" href=\"https:\/\/47canal.us\/exhibitions\/dignity-and-self-respect\" title=\"\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\">Dignity and Self Respect<\/a>,\u201d his breakout 2011 solo exhibition at <a class=\"css-yywogo\" href=\"https:\/\/47canal.us\/\" title=\"\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\">47 Canal<\/a> (the gallery Lee co-founded after closing 179), he exhibited his sculptures on bright white shelves and glowing plinths reminiscent of an Apple store. One piece, \u201cSleep Is for the Weak,\u201d consists of three French press coffee makers filled with absurd blends of the various stimulants \u2014 DayQuil, Vivarin, Coke Zero \u2014 his peers employed to stay awake long enough to work. Kline\u2019s commentary on the ways in which people use products to both engineer and broadcast their identities found its sharpest expression a few years later with \u201cSkittles,\u201d a sculpture that debuted on the High Line in 2014. Inside an industrial refrigerator, rows of smoothies represent lifestyles in liquid form. \u201cCondo\u201d is a creamy white concoction of coconut water, HDMI cable, infant formula, turmeric and hunks of purple yoga mat. \u201cWilliamsburg\u201d contains kombucha, quinoa, American Apparel underwear and blended credit cards, among other ingredients. The Museum of Modern Art acquired the work two years later but, in 2019, when \u201cSkittles\u201d was included in a group show, some ingredients had already become difficult to source. (The conservation team realized the museum needed to stockpile materials like Google Glass if it was going to reinstall the piece 50 or 150 years from now.) Beyond remarking on class and technology, \u201cSkittles\u201d underscores capitalism\u2019s dependence on cycles of obsolescence. While some artists make site-specific art, Kline instead set out to make work that was time-specific: projects that preserve the desires, ethics and frailties of the era in which they were made. \u201cI\u2019m not a person who believes in this myth of a timeless art,\u201d he told me. \u201cI think that\u2019s propaganda.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div class=\"css-79elbk\" data-testid=\"photoviewer-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"css-z3e15g\" data-testid=\"photoviewer-wrapper-hidden\"><\/div>\n<div data-testid=\"photoviewer-children\" class=\"css-1a48zt4 e11si9ry5\">\n<figure class=\"img-sz-medium css-d754w4 e1g7ppur0\" aria-label=\"media\" role=\"group\">\n<div class=\"css-1xdhyk6 erfvjey0\">\n<div class=\"css-nwd8t8\" data-testid=\"lazy-image\">\n<div data-testid=\"lazyimage-container\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"css-xaa95i ewdxa0s0\"><span aria-hidden=\"true\" class=\"css-1p4ky1 e13ogyst0\">A detail from Kline\u2019s 2014 installation \u201cSkittles,\u201d an attempt to capture lifestyles in liquid form.<\/span><span class=\"css-f4bmw8 e1z0qqy90\"><span><span aria-hidden=\"false\">Photo by Joerg Lohse. Courtesy of the artist and 47 Canal, New York<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"css-s99gbd StoryBodyCompanionColumn\">\n<div class=\"css-53u6y8\">\n<p class=\"css-at9mc1 evys1bk0\">If Kline\u2019s early works held a dark mirror to the present, his subsequent projects have focused on the future. With \u201cUnemployment,\u201d an immersive installation from 2016, he imagined a world in which automation and artificial intelligence have eliminated most office jobs, plunging the middle class into poverty. Its most haunting components are six unnervingly lifelike human figures dressed in office attire, balled up inside garbage bags like corporate flotsam. And in \u201cAdaptation,\u201d a short film he began shooting in 2019, Kline portrays a team of essential workers piloting a boat through the ruins of Midtown Manhattan, a maze of flooded avenues and half-submerged skyscrapers in a city swallowed by rising seas. \u201cIt\u2019s not a total inversion of our world. It\u2019s just that much off from what we\u2019re living in,\u201d says the curator Lumi Tan, a friend of the artist\u2019s. \u201cAnd we can all understand this is what\u2019s coming next if we continue in our mistreatment of the world.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"css-at9mc1 evys1bk0\">Still, not all of Kline\u2019s visions are quite so dystopian. In 2016, he created the videos \u201cUniversal Early Retirement (spots #1 &amp; #2),\u201d advertisements for a world without involuntary work, after interviewing the models for the \u201cUnemployment\u201d sculptures, professionals who had recently lost their jobs. When he asked them what they thought about universal basic income, nearly all of them said it would make people \u201clazy,\u201d but when Kline inquired instead what they would do if their basic needs were met, \u201cnone of them,\u201d he said, \u201canswered that they were just going to sit on the couch and watch TV.\u201d Instead, they described active lives caring for the elderly, fixing up their homes, pursuing new degrees and making art. The resulting videos co-opt the tropes of political campaign ads (sunbursts, rousing slogans, working people looking hopeful and resolved) to depict a diverse cast of adults living their best post-9-to-5 lives. The works could be mistaken for parodies, but Kline intended them as earnest suggestions of how activists might rebrand polarizing agendas. \u201cIt\u2019s a proposition for how you could convince people of these radical political policies like U.B.I.,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<div class=\"css-s99gbd StoryBodyCompanionColumn\">\n<div class=\"css-53u6y8\">\n<p class=\"css-at9mc1 evys1bk0\">As Kline freely admits, works like these verge on agitprop. But, points out Christopher Y. Lew, who is curating the Whitney show, desperate times call for art that explicitly aims to jolt viewers out of their complacency. Kline, he believes, is making the argument that \u201cit\u2019s not just Big Tech and corporations that are going to determine what our futures are like but that individuals can do this and, in a sense, ought to do it.\u201d The work, he argues, is a reminder of our own agency.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div class=\"css-79elbk\" data-testid=\"photoviewer-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"css-z3e15g\" data-testid=\"photoviewer-wrapper-hidden\"><\/div>\n<div data-testid=\"photoviewer-children\" class=\"css-1a48zt4 e11si9ry5\">\n<figure class=\"img-sz-large css-azjh2q e1g7ppur0\" aria-label=\"media\" role=\"group\">\n<div class=\"css-1xdhyk6 erfvjey0\">\n<div class=\"css-nwd8t8\" data-testid=\"lazy-image\">\n<div data-testid=\"lazyimage-container\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"css-vwjwk3 ewdxa0s0\"><span aria-hidden=\"true\" class=\"css-1p4ky1 e13ogyst0\">Kline\u2019s 2016 sculpture \u201cPoverty Dilation.\u201d<\/span><span class=\"css-f4bmw8 e1z0qqy90\"><span><span aria-hidden=\"false\">Photo by Joerg Lohse. Courtesy of the artist and 47 Canal, New York<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"css-s99gbd StoryBodyCompanionColumn\">\n<div class=\"css-53u6y8\">\n<p class=\"css-at9mc1 evys1bk0\">KLINE, WHO IS single and lives alone, does most of his work at his kitchen table. He develops ideas for installations and videos in the way a novelist or filmmaker might: drafting outlines, adding details, cutting sections and creating exhaustive written plans. He works until about 3 a.m. without the assistance of coffee, which, along with alcohol, he stopped drinking in his early 30s because of autoimmune disorders he ascribes to a childhood diet of \u201ctoxic\u201d candy and genetically modified food.<\/p>\n<p class=\"css-at9mc1 evys1bk0\">He has little patience for the art world\u2019s insularity, especially conceptual provocations that only make sense to those with an aesthetic theory decoder ring. \u201cYou shouldn\u2019t need four years of study of Lacan and Deleuze and Adorno and whoever to understand art,\u201d Kline told me. \u201cI want to create an art that\u2019s accessible to the FedEx delivery worker or a doctor who doesn\u2019t have that specific education but is interested in the society they live in.\u201d He\u2019s currently working on a feature film and, while the characters and plot are still under wraps, visitors to the Whitney exhibition will get a sense of the project\u2019s themes in a new series of sculptures with the working title \u201cPersonal Responsibility.\u201d Inside tents made to resemble shipping containers and emergency vehicles, video interviews with fictional climate refugees and relief workers will be shown. The scripts, written in collaboration with the filmmaker Thymaya Payne, draw from the experiences of real people affected by Hurricane Katrina, the California wildfires and the winter storms that caused devastating power outages across Texas in 2021, among other disasters.<\/p>\n<p class=\"css-at9mc1 evys1bk0\">These new pieces are the latest installments of what Kline conceives as a single overarching series that began with \u201cFreedom,\u201d and one he expects will be his life\u2019s work. When I asked him how he, as someone who reflects on cycles of cultural relevance and obsolescence, feels about aging and mortality, he paused. Being in his 40s, he said, was actually a relief. \u201cI feel like I\u2019ve been young for a long time,\u201d he said. \u201cNow I want to go deeper into my work.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div><\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>WHEN \u201cSURROUND AUDIENCE,\u201d the New Museum\u2019s third triennial of contemporary art, opened in downtown New<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":45055,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/peymantaeidi.net\/stem-cell\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/45053"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/peymantaeidi.net\/stem-cell\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/peymantaeidi.net\/stem-cell\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/peymantaeidi.net\/stem-cell\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/peymantaeidi.net\/stem-cell\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=45053"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/peymantaeidi.net\/stem-cell\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/45053\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":45056,"href":"https:\/\/peymantaeidi.net\/stem-cell\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/45053\/revisions\/45056"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/peymantaeidi.net\/stem-cell\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/45055"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/peymantaeidi.net\/stem-cell\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=45053"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/peymantaeidi.net\/stem-cell\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=45053"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/peymantaeidi.net\/stem-cell\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=45053"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}